Low Fodmap Zucchini Parmigiana

Low Fodmap Zucchini Parmigiana

Is zucchini a low-fodmap and soluble fiber vegetable?

Zucchini, according to the Monash App, is low fiber at the 1/3 cup level and slightly higher fodmap at the 1/2 cup level. Eating an amount of zucchini higher than 1/2 cup is a risk of eating the fodmap “fructan.”

As far as insoluble and soluble fiber goes, zucchini is a member of the squash family and is a safe, soluble fiber food. So if you limit your intake to 1/2 cup, zucchini is a low fodmap, safe fiber food. The traditional eggplant parmigiana may be low in fodmaps, but eggplant is an insoluble fiber vegetable plus it’s steeped in frying oil ( two IBS triggers). That’s why I happily switched to using zucchini and using less oil. (You can bake your zucchini slices to be even safer. Here is the link for baking them.   Zucchini Salad)

Other Benefits of Zucchini Over Eggplant

For those of you whose garden is now producing a ton of zucchini, think about making Zucchini Parmigiana. It feeds a crowd, it’s inexpensive and it freezes well. In the summer, when my neighbors leave surprise bags of zucchini on my screened porch, I am probably one of the few receivers of their garden bounty who is actually glad to get it. My family loves zucchini, so I  have many lovely recipes that call for lots of it.

This recipe is the one my mother made every summer on our farm when the zucchini ripened and was as big as baseball clubs. Back then it was not a sin to fry vegetables, so she fried the zucchini first and then layered it like eggplant parmigiana with sauce, parmesan cheese and lots of mozzarella cheese.

My next version uses less oil and can even be baked in the oven instead of frying. But it still tastes like the one I remember from my grandma and mom.

Ingredients:

3 medium or two large zucchini, washed, sliced and weighted on a board until the zucchini gives out its juices. Then dried with paper towels.

1 cup of all purpose flour (or GF flour) placed in a large plastic bag and seasoned with salt and pepper.

1/2 cup of olive oil

2 tbsp of olive oil

1/2 cup of grated parmesan cheese (Use good quality like reggiano parmesan)

1 lb of mozzarella cheese, shredded (I like Polly O)

1 large can or two medium cans of Italian imported plum tomatoes in juice

3 cloves of garlic sliced

1 medium bunch of Italian fresh basil

2 tbsp of finely chopped Italian parsley

2 tbsp of butter

Salt and fresh ground black pepper to taste

Directions:

Wash the zucchini under cold water and dry with paper towels. Slice the zucchini in 1/4 inch rounds. Pat them dry. Place the slices on a large wooden board or plastic vegetable cutting board. Cover with plastic wrap or a tea towel and weight it down with heavy cans. After 30 minutes check the slices, making sure the slices have released their liquid. Pat dry.

Place them in the plastic bag that contains the flour and seasoning. Dip all the slices in the seasoned flour and then pile the slices in a large bowl or on a plate near the skillet where you will fry them.

Heat the olive oil in a large heavy frying pan until the oil is shimmering. Fry the slices 8 or 9 at a time, three minutes to a side or until each side gets lightly browned. Remove the browned slices to a cookie sheet lined with paper towels. You can stack layers of fried slices between sheets of paper towels until all are fried and stacked between paper towels to absorb most of the oil.

Make the tomato sauce now or use sauce from your freezer that you have defrosted for this dish.

Tomato Sauce:

Blend the canned tomatoes in your blender until they are smooth – just a few seconds of blending accomplishes this. Peel 3 garlic cloves and slice them up. In a heavy 2 qt saucepan, on medium high heat, heat the 2 tbsp. of olive oil until hot and shimmering. Add the sliced garlic and stir the garlic around in the oil until it gets slightly golden and has permeated the oil with its flavor. Remove the garlic and set aside. (Removing the garlic also removes the fodmaps in garlic.)

Throw in the blended tomatoes and stir well. Add salt, pepper, previously sautéed garlic, chopped parsley and shredded basil. Stir sauce well, bring to a boil and then turn the heat down to a simmer. Taste the sauce. If the tomatoes are too acid, add 1/2 to 1 tsp of sugar. Taste again. If still too acidic, add 1/2 to 1 tsp baking soda. It will foam up, so keep stirring until the foam dies down. Taste again. Sauce should now be free from too much acidity. Partially cover  the sauce and simmer for 30 to 45 minutes, or until the sauce no longer tastes raw. Turn off the heat and add the 2 tbsp. of butter. Stir until the butter melts into the sauce.

When sauce is done you can begin to assemble the dish. In a 9 x 9 or circular baking dish, grease bottom and sides with butter. Then pour a ladle of sauce on the bottom of the dish. Next, place a layer of zucchini slices. Cover the layer with some sauce, a sprinkle of parmesan cheese and a sprinkle of shredded mozzarella cheese. Continue layering until all zucchini slices have been used up. On the last layer place a ladle of sauce, a sprinkle of parmesan and a sprinkle of shredded mozzarella cheese.

You can bake this right away in a 350° oven for 30 minutes  until bubbling and nicely browned on top, or you can place it in the refrigeraor covered in foil and plan to bake it later that day, or you can wrap it well in foil and freeze it. It will keep two months in the freezer. Bake a frozen zucchini parmigiana at 350º, but longer than a fresh one until it is bubbling and nicely browned.

*If your dish seems to have too much water coming up on the sides as it is baking, pull it out and remove the water using a large spoon or a turkey baster. Keep taking out the water until it stops appearing and the casserole begins to bake and then brown well. Don’t worry, it will. The water is annoying, but it won’t hurt the finished product. If you weighted the slices and dried them well, this could prevent water, but not always.

Zucchini Parmigiana

Zucchini Parmigiana Style

Servings 9 x13 pan of zucchini parmigiana
Calories 150 kcal

Ingredients
  

  • Ingredients:
  • 3 medium or two large zucchini washed, sliced and weighted on a board until the zucchini gives out its juices.
  • 1 cup of all purpose flour ( or GF flour) placed in a large plastic bag and seasoned with salt and pepper.
  • 1/2 cup olive oil
  • 2 tbsp of olive oil (for the tomato sauce)
  • 1/2 cup of grated parmesan cheese
  • 1 lb of mozzarella cheese shredded (I like Polly O whole milk mozzarella)
  • 1 large can or two medium cans of Italian imported plum tomatoes in juice
  • 3 cloves of garlic sliced
  • 1 medium bunch of Italian fresh basil
  • 2 tbsp of finely chopped Italian parsley
  • 2 tbsp of butter
  • Salt and fresh ground black pepper to taste

Instructions
 

  • Directions:
  • Wash the zucchini under cold water and dry with paper towels.
    Slice the zucchini in 1/4 inch rounds. Pat them dry. Place the slices on a large wooden board or plastic vegetable cutting board. Cover with plastic wrap or a tea towel and weight it down with heavy cans. After 30 minutes check the slices, making sure the slices have released their liquid. Pat dry. (If you want to bake them, coat with olive oil and bake at 424 degrees until brown on one side. Flip and brown the other side.)
  • Place them in the plastic bag that contains the flour and seasoning. Dip all the slices in the seasoned flour and then pile the slices in a large bowl or on a plate near the skillet where you will fry them.
  • Heat the olive oil in a large heavy frying pan until the oil is shimmering.
    Fry the slices 8 or 9 at a time, three minutes to a side or until each side gets lightly browned. Remove the browned slices to a cookie sheet lined with paper towels. You can stack layers of fried slices between sheets of paper towels until all are fried and stacked between paper towels to absorb most of the oil. (If you don't want to fry, you can also bake your zucchini slices after coating them with olive oil)
  • Make the tomato sauce now or use sauce from your freezer that you have defrosted for this dish.
  • Tomato Sauce:
  • Blend the canned tomatoes in your blender until they are smooth - just a few seconds of blending accomplishes this. Peel 3 garlic cloves and slice them up. In a heavy 2 qt saucepan, on medium high heat, heat the 2 tbsp of olive oil until hot and shimmering. Add the sliced garlic and stir the garlic around in the oil until it gets slightly golden and has permeated the oil with its flavor. Remove the garlic and set aside.
  • Throw in the blended tomatoes and stir well. Add salt, pepper, previously sautéed garlic, chopped parsley and shredded basil. Stir sauce well, bring to a boil and then turn the heat down to a simmer. Taste the sauce. If the tomatoes are too acid, add 1/2 to 1 tsp of sugar. Taste again. If still too acidic, add 1/2 to 1 tsp baking soda. It will foam up, so keep stirring until the foam dies down. Taste again. Sauce should now be free from too much acidity. Partially cover the sauce and simmer for 30 to 45 minutes, or until the sauce no longer tastes raw. Turn off the heat and add the 2 tbsp of butter. Stir until the butter melts into the sauce.
  • When sauce is done you can begin to assemble the dish.
    In a 9 x 9 square or circular baking dish, grease bottom and sides with butter. Then pour a ladle of sauce on the bottom of the dish. Next, place a layer of zucchini slices. Cover the layer with some sauce, a sprinkle of parmesan cheese and a sprinkle of shredded mozzarella cheese. Continue layering until all zucchini slices have been used up. On the last layer place a ladle of sauce, a sprinkle of parmesan and a sprinkle of shredded mozzarella cheese.
  • You can bake this right away in a 350° oven for 30 minutes until bubbling and nicely browned on top, or you can place it in the refrigerator covered in foil and plan to bake it later that day, or you can wrap it well in foil and freeze it. It will keep two months in the freezer. Bake a frozen zucchini parmigiana at 350º, but longer than a fresh one until it is bubbling and nicely browned.
  • Note:If your dish seems to have too much water coming up on the sides as it is baking, pull it out and remove the water using a large spoon or a turkey baster. Keep taking out the water until it stops appearing and the casserole begins to bake and then brown well. Don't worry, it will. The water is annoying, but it won't hurt the finished product. If you weighted the slices and dried them well, this could prevent water, but not always.

 



2 thoughts on “Low Fodmap Zucchini Parmigiana”

  • Joan,
    Since zucchini is so nice just barely saute’ed, I bet this dish would still be heavenly if the zucchini were added to the recipe just after the step to release the liquid. I have a ton of zucchini so, I think I’ll give it a try. I’ll report back with my results.
    D

    • I think your idea sounds interesting. Let me know if it works. Heaven know this is one vegetable that lets us experiment because there is so much more where that came from.

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